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10. A psychology of possession (Inglés) utor Peter Connolly

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A PSYCHOLOGY OF
POSSESSION
DR PETER CONNOLLY
Introduction : The Nature of Trance
Although widespread, the phenomenon of possession does not appear in all cultures. This
suggests that possession is a cultural artefact, either in the strong sense of being nothing
more than a cultural creation or in the weaker one of culture moulding and shaping
universal psychological processes in socially relevant ways. My own approach to
understanding possession lies very much within the framework of the weaker version. The
hypothesis I will seek to develop is essentially that the phenomena of possession are best
understood in terms of the psychological processes associated with the term ‘trance’. I use
this term deliberately and in full awareness of the reservations about its usefulness
expressed by some psychologists.
Among hypnosis researchers there are three broad approaches to explaining the nature of
trance. The first is that which emphasises socio-cognitive factors such as role play and
imaginative involvement in suggested experiences. In short, this approach explains away
any feature of trance which provides it with a distinctive character. This view would be
compatible with what I have called the strong version of cultural artifactualism. Another
approach emphasizes that trance is a genuine altered state of consciousness which differs
from ordinary consciousness in a variety of ways, most notably in that reflexive, executive or
ego consciousness – what many hypnotists call ‘the conscious mind’ – is dissociated from
unconscious processes. The third approach is more diffuse, combining the first two
explanations and, depending on the writer, perhaps adding a few other elements to produce
a kind of multi-variable theory.1 My own understanding inclines me towards the second and
third of these approaches and entails a clear recognition that trance is a distinctive altered
state of consciousness with pronounced dissociative characteristics. In short, the ability to
experience trance is common to all humans, though some may have a greater talent for it
than others, but cultures differ in the value they place upon it, the extent to which they
cultivate it and the purposes for which they employ it.
Hypnotic Trance
The kinds of trance states most well known to inhabitants of the industrialised west are
those usually associated with hypnosis or hypnotism (the terms are pretty much
interchangeable). The term ‘trance’ is, however, preferable to ‘hypnosis’ despite the fact
that it is difficult to avoid using the nomenclature of hypnosis when exploring trance
phenomena. One of the main reasons for this is that the word ‘hypnosis’ is derived from the
Greek hypnos meaning sleep, and since hypnotic states have little in common with sleep
states the term is actually a misnomer. There is a growing body of evidence to indicate that
the relaxation and sleep-like characteristics often associated with hypnotized persons are
actually artefacts of the induction procedure rather than intrinsic features of the hypnotic or
trance state itself.
The subjects of a stage hypnotist who perform a wide range of, often amusing, antics are in
trance throughout the performance as are those people who engage in an action on the
basis of post-hypnotic suggestion. In this latter case the cue they have been prompted to act
upon re-induces the trance state.2 As Robert Temple points out, it is active states of trance
that are most commonly referred to in anthropological literature, some writers actually
restricting the use of the term ‘trance’ to such active conditions. Hypnosis researchers have
tended to go in the opposite direction and ‘... persist in believing that all trances must
involve subjects drifting off to sleep-like states with suggestions of drowsiness’.3 Things have
begun to change, however.
Perhaps starting with W. R. Wells in the 1920s, a few researchers have been exploring the
relationship between hypnotic trance, where participants are encouraged to relax, and what
Arnold Ludwig and William Lyle call alert or hyper-alert trance.4 These two types of trance
have been found to be similar in terms of eliciting the characteristic hypnotic phenomena
such as analgesia, perceptual distortions and involuntary movements, as well as in terms of
subjects passing easily from one kind of trance to the other. As Bányai and Hilgard comment,
in alert trance ‘... all the important characteristics of hypnosis occur except the resemblance
to sleep’.5
Induction Techniques
Some notable differences have also been observed. In hypnotic trance subjects are
physically relaxed whereas in alert trance they frequently display tension or rigidity. In
hypnotic trance the experience of a blank mind is common during periods when the
hypnotist is not making suggestions, whereas those who have experienced alert trance
frequently report a cascade of thoughts and emotions. In hypnotic trance subjects often
describe a deep sense of calm and mental tranquillity whereas in alert trance they tend to
talk more about having ecstatic or peak experiences.6
Another reason for preferring the term ‘trance’ to ‘hypnosis’ is that the latter is frequently
understood to be something that one person does to another. Certainly trance states can be
induced by one person talking to, touching or making passes over another. But they can be
induced in other ways as well, not all of which involve another person. Individuals can put
themselves into trances (auto-hypnosis) as well as have other people do it for them (heterohypnosis). Many rituals link the two by providing a socially constructed context for the
facilitation of auto-hypnotic strategies. Stephen Gilligan offers the following as a list of
trance induction techniques:
... rhythmic and repetitive movement (dancing, running, rocking, breathing exercises, etc.);
chanting (meditation, prayer, group rituals, chants at rallies or sports events, the repetitive
self-talk of depression, etc.); attentional absorption (on a mantra, the hypnotist’s voice, an
image, an idea, the television, etc.); and balancing of muscle tonus (via relaxation processes,
7
massage, drugs such as alcohol or valium, rhythmic movement, etc.)
We could add to this list factors such as exposure to stress,8 extended periods of solitude
and loss of bodily equilibrium combined with a loud noise.9
Whatever their means of induction one thing that all trances have in common, according to
Gilligan, is that they ‘... tend to decrease the discontinuous, arrhythmic movements of
2
deliberate conscious orientation, thus giving rise to a more unified mode of experience’.10 At
the heart of trance experience then is what we might call the displacement of the conscious
mind, other terms for which are reflexive consciousness and ego. The conscious mind
performs a number of important mental functions. It ‘can be thought of as a blackboard
available to all the various subsystems of the brain’.11 It is thus a link between these
subsystems and, as such, has an integrating function – particularly through memory which,
as Peter Brown puts it, is ‘... the matrix of personal identity’.12 It works, according to Gilligan,
by ‘... structuring information into action frames or programs (mental sets) and sequencing
and computing conceptual relationships’.13 It is also highly sensitive to context – that is, it is
realistic. It is the locus of what Ronald Shor calls the generalized reality orientation.14 This
makes it conservative rather than creative; more of a manager than an artist.
The Conscious Mind
The conscious mind is thus permissive rather than initiatory. It can allow ideas emerging
from the unconscious to be implemented in behaviour or it can veto them. This power of
veto enables the conscious mind to ensure that implemented ideas conform to the frame or
map of the world with which it is operating. The way the veto functions is, in part, by the
narrowing of attention to what Gilligan calls ‘frame-relevant stimuli’. Such attentional
control both arises from and is maintained by muscular tension patterns.15 The conscious
mind is not, however, a unitary process. Ernest Hilgard, for example, distinguishes between
what he calls the executive and the monitoring functions. He writes,
Central executive functions are responsible for planning in relation to goals, initiating action
16
commensurate with these plans, and sustaining action against obstacles and distractions.
The monitor, by contrast,
... has a scanning function that includes alertness to all that is taking place, a recognition of the
familiar, and a readiness for the unexpected... In addition to scanning and selection the
monitoring function includes a critical or judgmental role, based on feedback from initiated
17
action as what is done is compared with intended goals and performances.
The only really contentious point in this description of conscious processes is the claim that
executive processes initiate action. Drawing on research carried out by Benjamin Libet
during 1985, the year that Hilgard revised Divided Consciousness, Robert Ornstein argues
that even when action appears to be initiated by conscious processes it is unconscious ones
that are often the real driving force. Libet’s work was concerned with what he called
‘readiness potential’ brainwaves. These occur only before movements we experience as
being consciously willed whether they be calculated or spontaneous. They begin around a
second before we become conscious of making a decision to act. It seems then, that even
many of the activities which seem to be initiated by our conscious selves would appear to be
generated unconsciously – albeit in response to a consciously thought out plan.18
When the conscious mind is displaced or dissociated unconscious processes are given a free
rein as it were, guided only by the directions of the hypnotist, the social context or some
goal determined prior to or during the induction procedure. Trance experience is thus
significantly different from ordinary experience. Gilligan enumerates and describes its
principal features. These include attentional absorption, involuntariness, immersion in
experiential and symbolic rather than conceptual processing, enhanced suggestibility,
perceptual flexibility, trance logic and a tendency to be amnesic for trance experiences on
return to ordinary consciousness.19
3
One thing that emerges from a consideration of this list is that the experience of trance is
rarely an end in itself. Usually it is a means to the attainment of some other end. It is
something like the neutral gear in a car. Changing from one gear to another usually involves
engaging or passing through neutral first. Another analogy might be the wood between the
worlds in C. S. Lewis’s story The Magician’s Nephew. The wood was a place of transit. From
there one could go to many other worlds. Such an understanding of trance is completely in
accord with the term’s Latin origins in the words transitus – a passage, and transire – to pass
over. Trance states can thus provide the psychological conditions for the elicitation and
exploration of a wide range of experiences.
In hypnotherapy a common distinction is that which is made between trance induction and
trance utilization. A trance state is relatively easy to elicit in a substantial proportion of the
population by using standard induction techniques. What distinguishes the skilful
hypnotherapist from the novice or the dabbler is the way in which the person is guided once
in the trance state. Cultures employ trance for different purposes. In some it is employed to
alleviate psychological and emotional distress, in others it is used to create memories and
change identity and in yet others it is a means of facilitating possession by a deity, spirit or
animal.
Trance and Possession
In the course of his extensive work on possession T. K. Oesterreich identifies two primary
dimensions of possession and five possessing agencies.20 These are: somnambulistic-lucid;
spontaneous (involuntary) – voluntary (cultivated); and possession by a demonic power, a
benign power, the spirit of a deceased person, another living person and an animal. Somnambulistic possession refers to a state in which the personality of the possessor completely
displaces the personality of the possessed and when, on return to the normality, the
possessed is amnesic for the period of possession. By contrast, in lucid possession, the
possessed
‘... does not lose consciousness of his usual personality but retains it ... he remains fully
21
conscious of what is happening; he is the passive spectator of what takes place within him’
The other dimension or axis (involuntary or spontaneous – voluntary or induced) is a little
more complex. The individual who is being possessed may interpret the experience as
spontaneous or involuntary though it may well have been induced by a third party, an
exorcist for example. Involuntary possession is often associated with sickness and is
generally treated as unwelcome, at least by the possessed person. But this is not always the
case. Many Christians would welcome and count as a blessing possession by the holy spirit.
Then there is the desire for what is sometimes called secondary gain. A number of writers
have noted that individuals possessed by demons are often relatively powerless members of
their societies, often female, for whom the take-over by a spirit provides an opportunity to
express and act out socially unacceptable opinions and behaviours and effect an improvement in their social status at the same time. This latter outcome is largely a consequence of
the fact that the successful identification and treatment of demonic possession serves to
buttress the belief-system and maintain or enhance the influence of the exorcising authority.
The possessed can thus be viewed as one of the many vehicles employed for the
propagation of a particular ideology. Involuntary possession, even by a demon, may, then,
be regarded as beneficial both by the possessed themselves and by the authorities which
take on the responsibility for treating such conditions.22
4
Unless one is prepared to accept that the world we inhabit is populated by numerous spirits,
many of which have the ability to displace an individual’s personality (and, by implication,
that what we call personality is capable of existing without a body) the prima facie
explanation of what occurs during possession, namely that some entity has taken over a
person’s body, is unconvincing. In terms of scientific method it is also unparsimonious. The
most promising alternative explanation, I would suggest, is that which is framed in terms of
trance states. As was noted previously, however, trance is merely a term for a state in which
a range of normally inaccessible possibilities becomes available to the entranced person.
Thus, although connected by the morphology of trance, the trance-based explanations of
voluntary and involuntary possession will differ somewhat as the utilization of the state is
different in each case.
Involuntary Possession and Exorcism
Involuntary possession, I shall argue, is fundamentally the same phenomenon as Multiple
Personality Disorder (MPD) or Dissociative Identity Disorder and hence the latter can be
used to shed light on the former. Voluntary possession, on the other hand, seems to be
much closer to what is known in the literature as deep trance identification, that is, whilst in
trance modelling and taking on the behavioural and personality characteristics of another
person (or being) who (or which) displays the desired skills or characteristics.23 We may
note, however, that some hypnosis researchers also regard MPD as a kind of deep trance
identification albeit one that has not been cultivated voluntarily.24
The phenomenology of involuntary possession and MPD is very similar. One involves
possession by one or more external entities; the other involves possession by one or more
internally created (though possibly externally prompted) personalities.25 The methods for
identifying them are also very similar. Spanos and Gottlieb describe the beginning of the
Roman Catholic exorcism procedure as follows:
... the priest was required to obtain information from the demoniac concerning the number
and names of the possessing demons, their reasons for possessing the individual, the exact
hour they entered the body and the length of time they intended to stay... In obtaining this
and other information the exorcist addressed only the possessing demons (as opposed to the
26
person possessed) and expected to be answered only by the demons.
This is an effective way of depotentiating consciousness and communicating directly with
unconscious processes. In other words, it is an hypnotic technique.
The parallels between exorcism and hypnosis are developed further by Spanos and Gottlieb
by their reference to exorcists eliciting some of the classic hypnotic phenomena:
For example, in order to impress the spectators with God’s power to perform miracles, one
exorcist commanded a possessed nun to change her body into iron, and immediately her ‘body
shot out straight, and the arms thrust out; and so lay the whole body of one piece as the priest
.27
said’.
A similar point is made by contemporary hypnotist Richard Bandler:
I know a man who is famous for working with multiple personalities. He always has about
twenty clients who are MPs. He’s also a good Catholic, so of course a lot of his clients are
possessed. He does exorcisms out on the helicopter pad behind a hospital ...
I went to see him because I was curious about his multiple personality clients. I met one of his
clients in an altered state and met four or five of her personalities and the demon that
possessed her. As far as I can tell, I can induce that in anybody. In fact, the way he went about
introducing me to these personalities is exactly the way I would go about inducing them as a
hypnotist.
5
The woman was sitting there in a chair, talking to us about how she has a lot of amnesia in her
life. Nobody else does, right? Yet this psychiatrist’s convincer for knowing that you are a
multiple personality is if there is any period of your life that you can’t remember! He makes up
a name for whatever period you have amnesia for. According to this psychiatrist, the period
that you can’t remember wasn’t you; that was another personality. He would give it some
name like ‘Fred’. Then he ignores your ongoing behaviour, hits you on the head unexpectedly
and calls this name ‘Fred! Fred! Come out! Come out!’. If you say ‘What do you mean, “Fred,
come out?”,’ he ignores you until suddenly some other personality emerges. That’s a great way
to make multiple personalities. I’m convinced that MPs are manufactured by parents and well28
meaning therapists; they are not spontaneously derived.
These comments suggest that the process of identifying possessing demons and alternate
personalities plays a major part in their creation as well. Indeed, throughout the late 1980s
and the 1990s there has been, in America particularly, an enormous growth in reported
cases of MPD and demonic possession, most if not all of which seem to have their roots in
the strategies employed by certain therapists and counsellors. Such therapists tend to fall
into three, sometimes overlapping, categories. The first is that of psychodynamic
psychotherapists, those who work on the assumption that the best way to heal people of
psychological and emotional pain is by getting them to relive past experiences which can be
identified as having been responsible for current distress. The second category is that of
feminist therapists who are convinced that the emotional pain and low self-esteem
experienced by many modern women is due to them having been sexually abused as
children by males. The third is that of Christian counsellors and therapists who believe in a
devil, demons, possession and Satanic ritual abuse.
Multiple Personalities
A key component in the so called therapeutic strategies of all these latter day exorcists is, as
Bandler indicated, the identification of gaps in a person’s memory. Then, by means of
various hypnotic techniques (though they are rarely described as such), the gaps are filled by
either memories of sexual abuse that have been repressed, memories of satanic abuse that
have been repressed, demons, alter-personalities or various combinations of these
depending on the orientation of the particular therapist. Why is this happening now? A
comment by Mark Pendergrast is illuminating:
The Survivors of SRA (satanic ritual abuse) ... regard themselves as a sort of elite inside the
Incest Survivor community. They’ve seen it all. They’ve suffered monstrously, beyond belief.
Their interior beings [many of them are diagnosed as suffering from MPD] include not only
the standard wounded inner children, but an entire host of strange alters, often including
animals, the opposite sex, and spiritually uplifting ‘inner self helpers’ who serve as gatekeepers
and guides. An MPD Survivor has the opportunity to speak in different voices, to discover
29
layers and layers of personalities, and to garner hushed respect and sympathy.
This is as clear an example of secondary gain as one could wish for. Even so, in many cases
‘secondary gain’ actually understates the perceived benefits.
As Pendergrast points out, the role of multiple personality or possessed person has become
increasingly attractive.
Those who harbor a hundred or more alters now object to their malady being termed a
disorder. Rather, it is a distinction, or a miracle. While MPD may have commenced because of
overwhelming trauma, it has released entertaining alters to cope with it. They are interesting,
creative personae who allow the MPD Survivor to use the royal ‘we’ and to take part in endless
internal dramas. ‘I can’t imagine being a singleton,’ one MPD told me. ‘How boring that would
30
be!’.
6
Benefits also accrue to the therapists, all of whom have their visions of the world confirmed
and experience a raising of status in their respective communities. In short, the groups to
which these therapists are affiliated feel themselves to be under attack in various ways, the
existence of these conditions supports their views of the world and their adoption of the
therapeutic mantle maintains or restores their self esteem.
The treatment for possession and MPD is also very similar: exorcism for the one;
hypnotherapy for the other. Exorcism is widely recognised, amongst hypnosis researchers at
least, as an hypnotic or trance-based strategy. Indeed, during the 18th century conditions
that were previously diagnosed as demonic possession began to be described in naturalistic
terms and treated by animal magnetism or Mesmerism, the precursor of modern hypnosis.
The Mesmerists saw themselves as having taken on the role of the exorcists though clerics
accused them of being sorcerers and inducing the maladies they cured.31 Eventually the
diagnosis of demonic possession disappeared from the European scene.
Henri Ellenberger presents this transition in terms of a clash between two of the great
personalities of the time: Johann Joseph Gassner (1727-1779) and Franz Anton Mesmer
(1734-1815). After observing a number of Gassner’s exorcisms Mesmer concluded that his
own techniques of animal magnetism were in essence the same as but more effective than
exorcism. As Ellenberger comments, ‘... Mesmer’s crisis was induced in exactly the same
way as Gassner’s exorcismus probativus; the evil was brought out as a first step towards its
removal’.32 Since Mesmer’s method was purely naturalistic, however, the supernatural
elements in both diagnosis and treatment were eliminated. Cases of possession all but
disappeared but a new condition, hitherto unknown in Europe, began to manifest itself. This
was Multiple Personality Disorder.33 The converse of this situation can be found on the
island of Bali in the Indian Ocean where the only one of the five dissociative disorders listed
in the third edition of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual not found was MPD, though there are plenty of cases of possession. On the basis of
this observation Suryani and Jensen suggest that MPD ‘... may be a culture-related syndrome
of Western cultures’.34 The similarities in the phenomenology, aetiology, diagnosis,
treatment and distribution of possession and MPD all point to the conclusion that they are
indeed the same phenomenon in different cultural garments. The demons and personalities
are imaginative creations that are facilitated by a trance state, which is often induced by an
exorcist or therapist, and then developed and often multiplied according to the
contingencies of the situation.
Possession In Shamanism
Almost the same statement could be made with regard to voluntary possession except that
the emphasis would be on auto rather than hetero induction, and the fact that possession
was being sought would be a matter of public knowledge. In some cases of voluntary
possession it is a specialist who cultivates trance and possession in order to engage in
therapeutic or divinitary activity on behalf of the community; a shaman would be a good
example here. In other cases many or most members of a group seek possession for their
own benefit. The Voodoo religion of Haiti and the related Candomblé religion of Brazil
provide good examples of this pattern.
Almost all writers on the subject agree that possession occupies a significant place in the
repertoire of many if not most shamans. They disagree, however, on the issue of its
centrality. Some, such as Eliade and Arbman, relegate it to a peripheral role whilst others,
such as Findeisen and Lewis, elevate it to the status of a crucial component. Much depends
on which shamanic cultures are regarded as prototypical, for this will determine the features
7
that are identified as most significant. In his extensive review of literature on this subject
Hultkrantz criticizes a number of authors for over-emphasizing one or other features of the
shamanic complex. He identifies four central constituents of shamanism: contact with the
supernatural world; the social role of mediator with that world; the accomplishment of such
meditation through the assistance of spirit helpers, and the shaman’s ecstatic or trance
experiences. A shaman could thus be said to be a person who, on behalf of a community,
enters a trance state and, by means of spirit helpers, obtains a range of benefits for that
community.
The role of the spirit helpers is crucial according to Hultkrantz. ‘Shamanism is unthinkable
without helping spirits’35 he maintains. The precise nature of the relationship between the
shaman and his or her spirits is less clear, however. Certainly he has contact with them
during the period of his calling to his vocation, during which he is harassed by spirits and
sometimes possessed by them.36 This suggests, in the case of those who are not members of
shamanic families, a spontaneous experience of dissociation and even trance, perhaps
prompted by stress and given shape by the motifs that are relevant to this kind of
experience in the person’s culture. Lewis suggests that the same pattern, albeit in a muted
form, is also found in the vocational calling of those who inherit the shamanic role from
older members of their families. Here, though, even if the experience is spontaneous it
cannot be unexpected, except, perhaps, in terms of timing. At root, however, there may be
little by way of significant difference between the two for, as was noted above, even
involuntary possession can have its attractions and, at some level, be a desired outcome for
the possessed person.
Only some of a shaman’s activities appear to involve possession. Hultkrantz identifies four
principal shamanic activities: doctor, diviner, psychopomp and hunting magician. Activities
undertaken in the context of the first two of these usually require the assistance of and
sometimes possession by helping spirits. If the illness is soul loss the shaman employs his
own free soul to bring it back, though whether this requires the assistance of spirit helpers is
a moot point. If the illness is one of intrusion, where ‘... an object or a spirit has invaded the
patient’s body’37, then spirit helpers are needed. Two techniques of divination are
employed. One requires the help of spirits, the other uses natural signs such as patterns of
cracks, lines on the hand and so on. The shaman thus performs many of his important tasks
with the aid of his spirit helpers. These are of two types: auxiliary, usually animal, spirits; and
a main or controlling spirit ‘... who often takes up his abode inside the shaman ...’38 Any
explanation of the nature and role of possession in shamanism thus requires a clear account
of the relationship between the shaman and his or her spirit helpers.
Much of the discussion among students of shamanism on the issue of possession revolves
around the meaning of the term possession, its relation to what Arbman calls ‘unconscious
ecstatic automatism’ and to what Hultkantz calls the ‘genial imitation’ of the spirits in
trance. It seems to me that much of the disagreement surrounding these issues can be
resolved by a simple application of the distinction between trance induction and trance
utilization. Arbman’s line of argument is that shamans experience possession only when
there is a belief in possession in their cultures. Phenomena such as a shaman speaking in
languages he or she does not know when entered by a spirit which speaks these languages,
or a shaman experiencing a swelling up of the body when entered by a spirit of a pregnant
woman, are intelligible in terms of unconscious ecstatic automatism he suggests. Hultkrantz
asks what the difference is between that state and possession, implying that it is a difficult
line to draw. He perceives a similar problem in the relationship between an entranced
shaman imitating spirits and being possessed by them. He writes,
8
... alleged cases of possession may... come down to nothing else than genial imitation. In some
cases, however, the stage between imitation and experienced possession is very slight, and the
39
latter may take place.
According to the model being presented here, all of these alternatives – imitation, entering
in and possession – are variants of trance utilization. They are all rooted in trance and it is
not surprising to find that they all have similar manifestations since they express, in various
ways, the idea that the shaman and his or her spirit helpers are involved in particularly
intimate relations – often indicated by claimed kinship relations between them. Problems
only arise when the objective reality of the spirits is accepted. In this case it is obviously
important to specify the relationships more precisely, but that takes us away from a purely
psychological explanation. It should, perhaps, be stressed at this point that a psychological
explanation is not necessarily one that is more true than a prima facie one, it is simply an
alternative. The truth value of each will be assessed differently by people living within
different myths about what the world is like.
The separation of the trance state and the strategies for its induction also helps to clarify
some of the confusions that can arise about different kinds of trances. Erika Bourguignon,
for example, distinguishes between what she calls ‘possession trance’ and what she calls
‘visionary trance.’ The former is ‘... feminine, associated with agricultural societies, occurs
typically in women is actively performed before an audience, and the period of trance is
usually forgotten’, whereas the latter is ‘... masculine, associated with hunting and gathering
cultures, occurs mostly in men, and is essentially an intrapsychic, physically passive
experience which is remembered’.40 This possession-visionary distinction can be seen as a
consequence of failure to separate trance from its utilization. Trance can be employed to
facilitate both kinds of experience and many others as well. Empirically, the gender and
economic-basis distinctions do not hold up either. Shamans are mainly associated with
hunting, gathering and herding cultures yet they can be male or female and most of them
have possession experiences of some kind. Likewise, the Candomblé religion of Brazil is
associated with an agricultural economy yet both men and women enter trance and
experience possession by spirits.
Possession in Candomblé
In Candomblé, Macumba, Voodoo and other related traditions possession occurs in a ritual
context and is induced by a similar range of trance-promoting techniques: drumming,
dancing, rhythmic breathing etc. The rituals are overseen by a kind of priest (houngan or
mambo in Voodoo; Pai de Santo or Mãe de Santo in Candomblé). Unlike the shaman, who is
a virtuoso performer, the houngan is more of a facilitator, who provides a location, supplies
and expertise.41 The context he provides is permeated by rhythmic percussion, symbols and
stories of the gods (loa in Voodoo, orisha/orixa in Candomblé) to facilitate trance and
provide the subjective conditions for possession to occur. The effects of possession in these
situations are usually empowering for the participants. As they come to internalize and take
on for themselves the personality characteristics of the deities who possess them so they
gain access to mental and emotional processes that are not ordinarily available to their
conscious selves.
Long-standing members of these groups may well have more than one patron deity who
possesses them and, thereby, in psychological terms, have access to a varied repertoire of
unconscious processes. As Pierre Verger, a French convert to Candomblé, observes, ‘... this
religion ... has the characteristic of exalting people’s personalities. People feel strong, people
feel protected.’42 This view is confirmed by Lucia,43 a Mãe de Santo whose personal Orisha is
Iansã. She says:
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Iansã ... is the orixa that governs with Xango. She is the goddess of lightning, of fire. She
is a very strong Orixa. She has a very strong personality and people under her also have
very strong personalities ... She is a warrior.
Interviewer: Like you?
Lucia:
That’s it.
(BBC film 1994)
Lucia:
The idea here seems to parallel the Hindu notion that people should have a personal deity
(ista-devata) and the Roman Catholic teaching that each member of the church should
chose a patron saint at the confirmation ceremony and cultivate a special relationship with
him or her thereafter. The difference is that the followers of Candomblé take their patrons
into themselves in the most profound manner possible, through possession.
Preparation for Possession
The preparation for the experience of possession has many parallels with the preparation a
person would undergo for deep trance identification. First of all, both sets of trainees have
to become proficient in the induction and utilization of trance experiences. For the initiate in
Candomblé this usually involves about three months of training which includes periods of
intense learning such as three weeks complete seclusion.44 Hypnotic subjects have to learn a
range of hypnotic skills, one of the most important of which is becoming amnesic for their
own identity. Another important aspect of the learning of both groups is the development of
a rich internal representation of the person or deity with whom the identification is to be
made. I’m not sure exactly how this is accomplished within Candomblé but in DTI it involves
the trainee imaginatively, in trance of course, stepping into the other person’s body and
experiencing their mannerisms, behaviour, body posture and movement, feelings etc., from
the inside as it were.45
One of the most effective techniques for facilitating DTI is the age regression of the person
to childhood, where ‘pretend realities’ are more vivid and their adult identity suspended or
displaced, and then go on to develop the identification. In the Candomblé tradition entry
into and exit out of the state of possession involves the experience of ‘ere’. As Gilbert
Rouget describes it,
... the novice in a state of ere behaves in a wholly infantile manner ... the ere state is one of
depersonalisation whose role in the initiation process is easily understood. For this process
consists, in practice, as much in losing one’s familiar personality as in acquiring a new one, and
46
this loss is indeed a necessary condition for this acquisition process.
To my mind the parallels between the preparations for DTI and possession by an Orisha are
just too strong to be coincidental. The obvious conclusion is that, like MPD and involuntary
possession, deep trance identification and voluntary possession are simply different cultural
variants of the same phenomenon. One has to be tentative, however, for our knowledge of
trance states is still in its infancy and we need to be alert to the dangers pointed out by
Aldridge-Morris in his monograph on Multiple Personality of ‘... explaining one mysterious
and elusive phenomenon in terms of an equally elusive and mysterious phenomenon’.47
Even so, I do think that our knowledge of trance phenomena in the context of clinical and
experimental hypnosis has reached the point where it has much to offer to those studying
trance and related phenomena in the context of religion. All that is needed now is for
students of religion to explore the connections more fully.
10
NOTES
1. See, for example, Lynn S. J. and Rhue J. W. ‘Theories of Hypnosis: An Introduction‘ in
Lynn S. J and Rhue W. (eds) Theories of Hypnosis: current models and perspectives The
Guildford Press, N.Y., 1991. The article by K. S. Bowers and T. M. Davidson in this
volume: ‘A Neodissociative Critique of Spanos’s Socio-Psychological Model of Hypnosis’
is one of the best critiques of the first approach and demonstrations of the validity of
the second that I have come across.
2. For a discussion of this work see Temple R Open to Suggestion: the uses and abuses of
hypnosis The Aquarian Press, Wellingborough, 1989, pp. 95–96.
3. Op. Cit., p.80. Cf. Erickson M. H. Collected Works Vol. 2 (Ed. Rossi E. L.) Irvington, N.Y.,
1980, p.327
4. Op. Cit., p. 78 ff.
5. Quoted in Op. Cit., p.85.
6. See Op. Cit., ch. 4., passim for details. C.f. Tart C. T. States of Consciousness E. P. Dutton,
N.Y., 1975, p. 81.
7. Gilligan S. G. Therapeutic Trances: the co-operation principle in Ericksonion Hypnotherapy Brunner/ Mazel, N.Y. 1987, p.42.
8. See, for example, Sargant W. Battle For The Mind: a physiology of conversion and brain
washing, Heinemann, London, 1957, pp. 12-13, and Jaynes, J, The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind (2nd ed.) Penguin, Harmondsworth,
1990/1993, especially pp. 347–353ff.
9. Storr A. Solitude HarperCollins, London, 1989, pp. 49-50; Will Macdonald, co-author
with Richard Bandler of An Insider’s Guide to Submodalities Meta Publications,
Cupertino, 1988, personal communication.
10. Gilligan, Loc. Cit.
11. Brown P. The Hypnotic Brain: hypnotherapy and social communication, Yale University
Press, New Haven, 1991, p.223.
12. Op. Cit., p .190.
13. Gilligan, Op. Cit. p.23.
14. Shor R. E. ‘Hypnosis and the Concept of the Generalized Reality Orientation’ American
Journal of Psychotherapy (1959) 13:582-602; reprinted in Tart C. T. (ed.) Altered States
of Consciousness Doubleday and Co. Inc., N.Y., 1972, pp. 239–256.
15. Gilligan, Op. Cit., p.24.
16. Hilgard E. R. Divided Consciousness: multiple controls in human thought and action (2nd.
Ed.) John Wiley and Sons, Inc., N.Y., 1986, p.220.
17. Op. Cit., p. 221.
18. See Ornstein R. E. The Evolution of Consciousness: of Darwin, Freud, and Cranial Fire:
The Origins of the Way We Think Prentice-Hall, N.Y., 1991, pp. 144 ff.
19. Gilligan, Op. Cit., pp. 46-59.
20. Oesterreich T. K. Possession and Exorcism among primitive races, in antiquity, the
middle ages, and modern times (previously entitled Possession: Demonical and Other)
Causeway Books, N.Y., 1974.
21. Op.Cit., p. 39.
11
22. For further discussion of benefits deriving from involuntary possession see for example,
Lewis I. M. Ecstatic Religion: an anthropological study of spirit possession and
shamanism Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1971, especially ch. 3; Spanos N. P. and Gottlieb
J. ‘Demonic Possession, Mesmerism, and Hysteria: A Social Psychological Perspective on
Their Historical interrelations’ Journal of Abnormal Psychology 88: 527-546, 1979.
23. Gilligan , Op. Cit., p. 57.
24. E.g. Bandler R. and Grinder J. Trance-Formations: Neuro-Linguistic Programming and
the structure of hypnosis Real People Press, Moab, Utah, 1981, pp. 188–189.
25. Michael Kenny has not been the only one to note that ‘... psychopathology often takes
the form of subjective impressions of external intrusion – invasion from a realm outside
the self ...’ (‘Multiple Personality and Spirit Possession’ Psychiatry 44: 337–358, 1981).
26. Spanos and Gottlieb, Op. Cit., p. 534.
27. Op. Cit., p. 537.
28. Bandler and Grinder, Op. Cit., pp. 188–189.
29. Pendergrast M. Victims of Memory: incest accusations and shattered lives, (revised
British edition), HarperCollins, London, 1996, p.45.
30. Op. Cit., p. 174.
31. See Spanos and Gottlieb, Op. Cit., especially pp. 538–539.
32. Ellenberger H. F. The Discovery of The Unconscious: the history and evolution of dynamic
psychiatry Fontana/HarperCollins, London, 1970, p.11.
33. Loc. Cit.
34. Suryani L. K. and Jensen G. D. Trance and Possession in Bali O.U.P, Oxford, 1993, p. 197.
35. Hultkrantz Å. ‘Ecological and Phenomenological Aspects of Shamanism’ in Diószegi V.
and Hoppál M. (Eds.) Shamanism in Siberia Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1978, p. 42.
36. Op. Cit., p. 48.
37. Op. Cit., p. 36.
38. Op. Cit., p. 40.
39. Op. Cit., p. 49.
40. Peters L. G. and Price-Williams D. ‘A Phenomenological Overview of Trance’ Transcultural Psychiatric Research Review 2, 1983, 5-59, p. 5.
41. Goodman F. Ecstasy, Ritual and Alternate Reality Indiana University Press, 1988, p. 109.
42. FILM. Arena: Bahia of all the saints BBC 2, 7.5.1994.
43. Op. Cit.
44. Rouget G. Music and Trance University of Chicago Press, 1985, p. 47.
45. Bandler and Grinder, Op.Cit., pp. 185-189.
46. Rouget, Op. Cit., pp. 47-48.
47. Aldridge-Morris R. Multiple Personality, an exercise in deception Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, Hove, 1989, p. 51.
12
THE AUTHOR
Dr Peter Connolly was born in 1951 in Chorley, Lancashire. He read Religious Studies at the
University of Lancaster where he was awarded BA, MA and PhD degrees. In 1980 he was
appointed to a lectureship in Religious Studies at the then West Sussex Institute of Higher
Education (now University College Chichester) where he has remained, basking in the benign
weather of Bognor Regis where he lives. Dr Connolly has a long-standing interest in altered
states of consciousness, which he has investigated from a number of perspectives. Initially
this involved him in a largely phenomenological study of the yogic traditions in India. More
recently after taking a psychology degree with the Open University and researching more
extensively in the psychology of religion, he has been seeking to understand a wide range of
religious experiences from a psychological perspective, particularly that of hypnosis
research. To this end he has published articles on ‘Hypnotic Dimensions of Religious
Worldviews’, Religion and Mental Health’ and ‘Mystical Experience and Trance Experience.’
Dr Connolly believes that, as far as possible, one should complement theoretical
investigation in this field with practical experience. During his period of studying yogic
traditions and phenomena this led him into the practice of various types of meditation, and
since he embarked on more purely psychological studies he has undertaken training in
clinical hypnosis and Neuro-Linguistic Programming. During all these explorations he was
able to experience a range of trance states to complement those he shares with most of the
rest of the population through daydreaming, watching TV and films, dancing and various
other forms of physical exercise. It is the continuity and similarity between the states
produced through these activities which, as much as anything else, convinced him that
hypnosis research has much to offer the study of religion.
Dr Connolly’s other main area of interest is that of values and ethics, where he seeks to
apply the perspectives of evolutionary biology and psychology alongside those of traditional
moral philosophy. This field also connects with altered states of consciousness, not least
because the kinds of experiences a person has are determined to a significant degree by the
value system within which they live.
His other publications include Perspectives on Indian Religion: papers in honour of Karel
Werner (1986), Religion Through Festivals – Buddhism (1989), Vitalistic Thought in India
(1992), Buddhism (1992), Indian Insights: Buddhism Brahmanism and Bhakti. Papers from
the Spalding Seminars on Indian Religion (1997) and Approaches to the Study of Religion
(1999). Dr Connolly is married and has two daughters.
______________________________________________________________________
RERC Second Series Occasional Paper 23
October 1998
Copyright ©1998 Religious Experience Research Centre
ISBN 0 906165 33 4
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